Neti Yoga

On Fri, 13 Sep 2002 16:49:10 -0400, Jaldhar H. Vyas
<jaldhar at BRAINCELLS.COM> wrote:
>>> advaita a. 1. not dual; of one or uniform nature, equable, unchanging.
>> advaitam sukhadukhayoh (uttararamacharita 1.39) 2. matchless, peerless,
>> sole, unique.
>>None of these definitions necessarily have to be applied to religion.
>Some cognate words are given too.
>>> advaitam n. 1. non-duality, identity; especially that of Brahma[sic] with
>> the universe or with the soul, or of soul and matter; see advaya also.
>> 2. The supreme or highest truth or Brahma itself.
>>Apart from the fact Apte wrongly says Brahma instead of Brahman this
>should be clear. It is "not two" not "all is one." There is a subtle
>difference in emphasis here. Can you see what it is?
>>> advaitavadin n. = advayavadin, q.v. above; a Vedantin.
>>Note the last definition.
>
I finally got a chance to look up the Sanskrit Hindi Shabda Kosha. It might
interest you to know that withing the definition for the word "advaita"
comes the "samasta pada" vaadin = advayavaadin which with a note to look up
advaya, followed by the remark "vedanta ka anuyaayi (follower of vedanta)".
So I looked up advaya as well:
advaya: (ad.) [naasti dvayam yasya] 1. do nahin (not two) 2. advitIya,
anupam (without comparison), ekmaatra (one only), name of Buddha.
samasta pada - vaadin (= advaita) (advayavaadin) 1. vishva (universe) and
brahman and prakriti and aatma - the follower for line that says they are
one. 2. Buddha.
I am sure there are many surprises for you explaining advayavadin, advaya
and relating Buddha to all this.
ashish